The defendant Roland G. Hopkins (Roland) challenges a judgment in favor of the plaintiff attorney which requires Roland to pay certain attorney ’ s fees incurred by Leslie L. Hopkins (Leslie). 2 The plaintiff asserted that, as part of the resolution of a domestic but nonmarital dispute, Roland agreed with Leslie to satisfy her debt to the plaintiff arising out of his representation of her in that dispute. We took Roland’s appeal on оur own motion and now affirm the judgment.
The judge, who heard the case without a jury, found the following facts. Leslie and Roland lived together for four years prior to June, 1983, and they had a child. Leslie had been married previously and had two children from that marriage. In June, 1983, Leslie retained the plaintiff to represent her in Plymouth Probate Court proceedings that Roland had brought to evict her from his house in Duxbury where they had been living and to obtain custody of their child. The plaintiff thereafter commenced a breach of contract action in Plymouth Superior Court on behalf of Leslie against Roland and obtained a real estate attachment.
In the fall of 1983, Leslie and Roland agreed, without the plaintiff’s participation, to settle both actions. They agreed that she and the three children would return to live with Roland and that he would support them. The judge found that Roland agreed to pay Leslie’s legal fees in both the Probate and Superior Court proceedings. They resumed living together in Roland’s house in Duxbury.
In response to Leslie’s request, the plaintiff submitted a bill for his sеrvices. Leslie advised the plaintiff that Roland would not pay the bill in the form submitted and that he wanted an itemized bill. Roland also wrote the plaintiff and requested an itemized bill. In January, 1984, the plaintiff sent a bill itemizing his services. On March 8 Roland wrote and sent a letter, which Leslie never saw, to the plaintiff over Leslie’s purported signature suggesting the bill was too high. 3
*90 The judge found it entirely reasonable that Roland would make an agreement with Leslie to pay her counsel fees as part of the settlement of the Superior Court action. The judge also inferred Roland’s acknowledgment of that obligation from Roland’s intentional failure to appеar at the trial (an inference Roland does not argue was unwarranted) and from his sending of the March 8 letter as if it had come from Leslie.
The judge found that Leslie had no specific fee arrangement with the рlaintiff and that the amount of the bill ($18,500) was a fair and reasonable fee for the plaintiff’s services. He noted that the plaintiff should have maintained time records, but did not. The judge ruled that the plaintiff was not limited to his regular hourly charge in 1983 of $125. The judge also noted that there were several relevant factors in determining a lawyer’s fee, citing S.J.C. Rule 3:07, DR 2-106 (B), as appearing in
1. Roland grants that an intended beneficiary may recover on a contract to which it is not а party. See
Flattery
v.
Gregory,
Roland challenges as clearly erroneous the judge’s findings which indicate that the plaintiff was an intended beneficiary of the agreement between Roland and Leslie. Roland relies on Leslie’s testimony that he never actually said that he would pay the bill but only that he would take care of it. Roland’s statement, however, surely warranted the judge’s conclusion that Roland agreed to satisfy Leslie’s obligation to the plaintiff, whether in the amount of the bill or in some lesser amount. 4 *91 The judge also was warranted in concluding that Roland’s promise to take care of Leslie’s legal expenses was рart of the terms under which she agreed to settle the lawsuits between them and to return with the children to live with Roland. The ruling that the plaintiff was a creditor beneficiary entitled to maintain this action was correct. See Choate, Hall & Stewart v. SCA Servs., Inc., supra; Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 302 (1) (a) (1981).
Roland further claims that the plaintiff may not prevail because Leslie had no enforceable agreement on which the plaintiff in turn could rely. Roland impliedly argues that there was no consideration for his promises because Leslie’s claim against him was a “palimony” claim which is not recognized in this Commonwealth and its abandonment thus was not valuable consideration for his promise to pay the plaintiff’s fеes. Roland further asserts that the agreement is tainted with illegality and, therefore, is unenforceable because it includes Leslie’s agreement to live with him. 5 Roland’s argument might fairly be viewed as a collective аssertion that part of the purported consideration of Roland’s promises was a nullity and the balance was illegal.
The fact that Leslie’s contract action ultimately might have failed (see
Davis
v.
Misiano,
We turn then to Roland’s assertion that the agreement was so tainted with illegality that it is unenforceable as a matter of public policy because it was an agreement for unlawful cohabitation and sexual relations. See G. L. c. 272, § 16 (lascivious cohabitation, as appearing in St. 1987, с. 43, deleting prohibition of cohabitation); G. L. c. 272, § 18 (fornication).
6
The issue of illegality or unenforceability on public policy grounds was not pleaded as a defense (Mass. R. Civ. P. 8 [c],
The record does not show on undisputed facts that illicit sexual relations were an inherent aspect of the agreement or a “serious and not merely an incidental part of the performance of the agreement.”
Green
v.
Richmond, supra
at 51. There was no testimony that illicit sexual relations were involved in the agreement or in its performance. We recognize that resumption of sexual relаtions presumably was an expected consequence of Leslie’s return to live with Roland (see
id.
at 50 n.2), but such an observation alone does not show indisputably that the agreement by its terms or in its performance is so against public policy as to be unenforceable. If there had been an undisputed showing of illegal activity in the performance of the agreement, the circumstances could have then been evaluated using the various factors set forth in
Town Planning & Eng’g Assocs.
v.
Amesbury Specialty Co.,
2. The $18,500 fee awarded was not excessive, and the judge’s findings and rulings were adequate to support his conclusion.
The plaintiff was entitled to a fair and reasonable fee determined by the consideration of various relevant factors.
Mulhern
v.
Roach,
It is true that the judge did not explicitly discuss each factor that our cases and court rules list as possibly relevant. Indeed, there was no evidence bearing on some of these factors, such as the attorney’s reputation, the demand for his services, and the customary charges for similar services by others. We have never required a judge to make a factor by factor analysis in findings and rulings in an attorney’s fee action. Such a careful analysis, however, generally is helpful in lending support to a judge’s conclusions. See Mulhern v. Roach, supra at 25-30; First Nat’l Bank v. Brink, supra at 266-267. In this case *94 involving a much smaller fee than those in the cases just cited, the judge hаd discretion to give weight to the factors, and his findings show that he was aware of them. That is enough.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Although Leslie acquired the surname Hopkins in the course of her relationship with Roland, they were not married at any time rеlevant to this appeal.
Roland and Leslie separated again in December, 1984, and since have been living apart.
The plaintiff testified without objection that Leslie told him that as part of the resolutiоn of their dispute “Roland Hopkins would pay her legal fees involved in both of the cases.”
The plaintiff represented himself and, without objection, presented his testimony in a narrative form. In such situations a question аnd answer *91 format is generally preferable because it permits objections to be raised in the normal course.
Roland’s answer did not plead illegality, nor did he argue it below. He did plead the Statute of Frаuds which does not, however, apply to an oral promise to the promisee but only to one made to the third party.
Perkins
v.
Littlefield,
We observe but pass by the question whether an agreement by the parents of an illegitimate child to live together with that child, which at most would involve conduct treated as a misdemeanor (and not often prosecuted), contravenes public policy to the extent that collateral aspects of that agreement should not be enforced.
Although we do not rely on the circumstances, we are reassured in our conclusion by the fact that the trial judge, sitting on recall in the Superior Court, has had many years of experience dealing with domestic relations matters and attorney ’ s fee awards as a judge of the Probate and Family Court.
